journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36972611/the-computational-and-neural-bases-of-context-dependent-learning
#21
REVIEW
James B Heald, Daniel M Wolpert, Máté Lengyel
Flexible behavior requires the creation, updating, and expression of memories to depend on context. While the neural underpinnings of each of these processes have been intensively studied, recent advances in computational modeling revealed a key challenge in context-dependent learning that had been largely ignored previously: Under naturalistic conditions, context is typically uncertain, necessitating contextual inference. We review a theoretical approach to formalizing context-dependent learning in the face of contextual uncertainty and the core computations it requires...
July 10, 2023: Annual Review of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36917822/cognition-from-the-body-brain-partnership-exaptation-of-memory
#22
REVIEW
György Buzsáki, David Tingley
Examination of cognition has historically been approached from language and introspection. However, human language-dependent definitions ignore the evolutionary roots of brain mechanisms and constrain their study in experimental animals. We promote an alternative view, namely that cognition, including memory, can be explained by exaptation and expansion of the circuits and algorithms serving bodily functions. Regulation and protection of metabolic and energetic processes require time-evolving brain computations enabling the organism to prepare for altered future states...
July 10, 2023: Annual Review of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36917821/neural-circuits-for-emotion
#23
REVIEW
Meryl Malezieux, Alexandra S Klein, Nadine Gogolla
Emotions are fundamental to our experience and behavior, affecting and motivating all aspects of our lives. Scientists of various disciplines have been fascinated by emotions for centuries, yet even today vigorous debates abound about how to define emotions and how to best study their neural underpinnings. Defining emotions from an evolutionary perspective and acknowledging their important functional roles in supporting survival allows the study of emotion states in diverse species. This approach enables taking advantage of modern tools in behavioral, systems, and circuit neurosciences, allowing the precise dissection of neural mechanisms and behavior underlying emotion processes in model organisms...
July 10, 2023: Annual Review of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36917820/how-instructions-learning-and-expectations-shape-pain-and-neurobiological-responses
#24
REVIEW
Lauren Y Atlas
Treatment outcomes are strongly influenced by expectations, as evidenced by the placebo effect. Meta-analyses of clinical trials reveal that placebo effects are strongest in pain, indicating that psychosocial factors directly influence pain. In this review, I focus on the neural and psychological mechanisms by which instructions, learning, and expectations shape subjective pain. I address new experimental designs that help researchers tease apart the impact of these distinct processes and evaluate the evidence regarding the neural mechanisms by which these cognitive factors shape subjective pain...
July 10, 2023: Annual Review of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36913712/meningeal-mechanisms-and-the-migraine-connection
#25
REVIEW
Dan Levy, Michael A Moskowitz
Migraine is a complex neurovascular pain disorder linked to the meninges, a border tissue innervated by neuropeptide-containing primary afferent fibers chiefly from the trigeminal nerve. Electrical or mechanical stimulation of this nerve surrounding large blood vessels evokes headache patterns as in migraine, and the brain, blood, and meninges are likely sources of headache triggers. Cerebrospinal fluid may play a significant role in migraine by transferring signals released from the brain to overlying pain-sensitive meningeal tissues, including dura mater...
July 10, 2023: Annual Review of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36854318/spinal-interneurons-diversity-and-connectivity-in-motor-control
#26
REVIEW
Mohini Sengupta, Martha W Bagnall
The spinal cord is home to the intrinsic networks for locomotion. An animal in which the spinal cord has been fully severed from the brain can still produce rhythmic, patterned locomotor movements as long as some excitatory drive is provided, such as physical, pharmacological, or electrical stimuli. Yet it remains a challenge to define the underlying circuitry that produces these movements because the spinal cord contains a wide variety of neuron classes whose patterns of interconnectivity are still poorly understood...
July 10, 2023: Annual Review of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36854317/astrocyte-endfeet-in-brain-function-and-pathology-open-questions
#27
REVIEW
Blanca Díaz-Castro, Stefanie Robel, Anusha Mishra
Astrocyte endfeet enwrap the entire vascular tree within the central nervous system, where they perform important functions in regulating the blood-brain barrier (BBB), cerebral blood flow, nutrient uptake, and waste clearance. Accordingly, astrocyte endfeet contain specialized organelles and proteins, including local protein translation machinery and highly organized scaffold proteins, which anchor channels, transporters, receptors, and enzymes critical for astrocyte-vascular interactions. Many neurological diseases are characterized by the loss of polarization of specific endfoot proteins, vascular dysregulation, BBB disruption, altered waste clearance, or, in extreme cases, loss of endfoot coverage...
July 10, 2023: Annual Review of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36854316/circadian-rhythms-and-astrocytes-the-good-the-bad-and-the-ugly
#28
REVIEW
Michael H Hastings, Marco Brancaccio, Maria F Gonzalez-Aponte, Erik D Herzog
This review explores the interface between circadian timekeeping and the regulation of brain function by astrocytes. Although astrocytes regulate neuronal activity across many time domains, their cell-autonomous circadian clocks exert a particular role in controlling longer-term oscillations of brain function: the maintenance of sleep states and the circadian ordering of sleep and wakefulness. This is most evident in the central circadian pacemaker, the suprachiasmatic nucleus, where the molecular clock of astrocytes suffices to drive daily cycles of neuronal activity and behavior...
July 10, 2023: Annual Review of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36750409/therapeutic-potential-of-ptbp1-inhibition-if-any-is-not-attributed-to-glia-to-neuron-conversion
#29
REVIEW
Lei-Lei Wang, Chun-Li Zhang
A holy grail of regenerative medicine is to replenish the cells that are lost due to disease. The adult mammalian central nervous system (CNS) has, however, largely lost such a regenerative ability. An emerging strategy for the generation of new neurons is through glia-to-neuron (GtN) conversion in vivo, mainly accomplished by the regulation of fate-determining factors. When inhibited, PTBP1, a factor involved in RNA biology, was reported to induce rapid and efficient GtN conversion in multiple regions of the adult CNS...
July 10, 2023: Annual Review of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35803589/cross-modal-plasticity-in-brains-deprived-of-visual-input-before-vision
#30
REVIEW
Guillermina López-Bendito, Mar Aníbal-Martínez, Francisco J Martini
Unimodal sensory loss leads to structural and functional changes in both deprived and nondeprived brain circuits. This process is broadly known as cross-modal plasticity. The evidence available indicates that cross-modal changes underlie the enhanced performances of the spared sensory modalities in deprived subjects. Sensory experience is a fundamental driver of cross-modal plasticity, yet there is evidence from early-visually deprived models supporting an additional role for experience-independent factors...
July 8, 2022: Annual Review of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35803588/the-cerebellar-cortex
#31
REVIEW
Court Hull, Wade G Regehr
The cerebellar cortex is an important system for relating neural circuits and learning. Its promise reflects the longstanding idea that it contains simple, repeated circuit modules with only a few cell types and a single plasticity mechanism that mediates learning according to classical Marr-Albus models. However, emerging data have revealed surprising diversity in neuron types, synaptic connections, and plasticity mechanisms, both locally and regionally within the cerebellar cortex. In light of these findings, it is not surprising that attempts to generate a holistic model of cerebellar learning across different behaviors have not been successful...
July 8, 2022: Annual Review of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35803587/theory-of-the-multiregional-neocortex-large-scale-neural-dynamics-and-distributed-cognition
#32
REVIEW
Xiao-Jing Wang
The neocortex is a complex neurobiological system with many interacting regions. How these regions work together to subserve flexible behavior and cognition has become increasingly amenable to rigorous research. Here, I review recent experimental and theoretical work on the modus operandi of a multiregional cortex. These studies revealed several general principles for the neocortical interareal connectivity, low-dimensional macroscopic gradients of biological properties across cortical areas, and a hierarchy of timescales for information processing...
July 8, 2022: Annual Review of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35803586/signaling-pathways-in-neurovascular-development
#33
REVIEW
Amir Rattner, Yanshu Wang, Jeremy Nathans
During development, the central nervous system (CNS) vasculature grows to precisely meet the metabolic demands of neurons and glia. In addition, the vast majority of the CNS vasculature acquires a unique set of molecular and cellular properties-collectively referred to as the blood-brain barrier-that minimize passive diffusion of molecules between the blood and the CNS parenchyma. Both of these processes are controlled by signals emanating from neurons and glia. In this review, we describe the nature and mechanisms-of-action of these signals, with an emphasis on vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and beta-catenin (canonical Wnt) signaling, the two best-understood systems that regulate CNS vascular development...
July 8, 2022: Annual Review of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35803585/neuroscientific-evidence-for-processing-without-awareness
#34
REVIEW
Liad Mudrik, Leon Y Deouell
The extent to which we are affected by perceptual input of which we are unaware is widely debated. By measuring neural responses to sensory stimulation, neuroscientific data could complement behavioral results with valuable evidence. Here we review neuroscientific findings of processing of high-level information, as well as interactions with attention and memory. Although the results are mixed, we find initial support for processing object categories and words, possibly to the semantic level, as well as emotional expressions...
July 8, 2022: Annual Review of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35803584/functional-ultrasound-neuroimaging
#35
REVIEW
Gabriel Montaldo, Alan Urban, Emilie Macé
Functional ultrasound (fUS) is a neuroimaging method that uses ultrasound to track changes in cerebral blood volume as an indirect readout of neuronal activity at high spatiotemporal resolution. fUS is capable of imaging head-fixed or freely behaving rodents and of producing volumetric images of the entire mouse brain. It has been applied to many species, including primates and humans. Now that fUS is reaching maturity, it is being adopted by the neuroscience community. However, the nature of the fUS signal and the different implementations of fUS are not necessarily accessible to nonspecialists...
July 8, 2022: Annual Review of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35508195/synaptic-mechanisms-regulating-mood-state-transitions-in-depression
#36
REVIEW
Puja K Parekh, Shane B Johnson, Conor Liston
Depression is an episodic form of mental illness characterized by mood state transitions with poorly understood neurobiological mechanisms. Antidepressants reverse the effects of stress and depression on synapse function, enhancing neurotransmission, increasing plasticity, and generating new synapses in stress-sensitive brain regions. These properties are shared to varying degrees by all known antidepressants, suggesting that synaptic remodeling could play a key role in depression pathophysiology and antidepressant function...
July 8, 2022: Annual Review of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35440143/adeno-associated-virus-toolkit-to-target-diverse-brain-cells
#37
REVIEW
Rosemary C Challis, Sripriya Ravindra Kumar, Xinhong Chen, David Goertsen, Gerard M Coughlin, Acacia M Hori, Miguel R Chuapoco, Thomas S Otis, Timothy F Miles, Viviana Gradinaru
Recombinant adeno-associated viruses (AAVs) are commonly used gene delivery vehicles for neuroscience research. They have two engineerable features: the capsid (outer protein shell) and cargo (encapsulated genome). These features can be modified to enhance cell type or tissue tropism and control transgene expression, respectively. Several engineered AAV capsids with unique tropisms have been identified, including variants with enhanced central nervous system transduction, cell type specificity, and retrograde transport in neurons...
July 8, 2022: Annual Review of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35440142/human-cerebellar-development-and-transcriptomics-implications-for-neurodevelopmental-disorders
#38
REVIEW
Parthiv Haldipur, Kathleen J Millen, Kimberly A Aldinger
Developmental abnormalities of the cerebellum are among the most recognized structural brain malformations in human prenatal imaging. Yet reliable information regarding their cause in humans is sparse, and few outcome studies are available to inform prognosis. We know very little about human cerebellar development, in stark contrast to the wealth of knowledge from decades of research on cerebellar developmental biology of model organisms, especially mice. Recent studies show that multiple aspects of human cerebellar development significantly differ from mice and even rhesus macaques, a nonhuman primate...
July 8, 2022: Annual Review of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35440141/beyond-wrapping-canonical-and-noncanonical-functions-of-schwann-cells
#39
REVIEW
Carla Taveggia, M Laura Feltri
Schwann cells in the peripheral nervous system (PNS) are essential for the support and myelination of axons, ensuring fast and accurate communication between the central nervous system and the periphery. Schwann cells and related glia accompany innervating axons in virtually all tissues in the body, where they exhibit remarkable plasticity and the ability to modulate pathology in extraordinary, and sometimes surprising, ways. Here, we provide a brief overview of the various glial cell types in the PNS and describe the cornerstone cellular and molecular processes that enable Schwann cells to perform their canonical functions...
July 8, 2022: Annual Review of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35436413/microglia-and-neurodevelopmental-disorders
#40
REVIEW
John R Lukens, Ukpong B Eyo
Mounting evidence indicates that microglia, which are the resident immune cells of the brain, play critical roles in a diverse array of neurodevelopmental processes required for proper brain maturation and function. This evidence has ultimately led to growing speculation that microglial dysfunction may play a role in neurodevelopmental disorder (NDD) pathoetiology. In this review, we first provide an overview of how microglia mechanistically contribute to the sculpting of the developing brain and neuronal circuits...
July 8, 2022: Annual Review of Neuroscience
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